Emergency Communications Interface between Technology, Policy, and Business Paul Kolodzy 15 November 2012.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
A New Era in Critical Communications
Advertisements

How to establish broadband markets in rural areas.
Local economic development in less favoured urban areas
Performance Analysis Lab,
The Role of Environmental Monitoring in the Green Economy Strategy K Nathan Hill March 2010.
Building open regional innovation strategies: New opportunities provided by Smart Specialisation Strategies Claire Nauwelaers Independent STI policy expert.
WASHINGTON DC NETWORK TECHNOLOGY OVERVIEW EDUCAUSE POLICY PANEL APRIL 26, 2006 CHRIS PEABODY DEPUTY CTO: NETWORK AND COMMUNICATION SERVICES Government.
European Network Technologies Connecting the Digital Society Future Networks EU Research for the ubiquitous ultrafast Internet of the future enabling every.
FirstNet Overview Amanda Hilliard Director of Outreach August 21, 2014
What IHE Delivers 1 Business models - sustainability IHE Australia Worhshop – July 2011 Peter MacIsaac & Paul Clarke.
RadComms 2014: Innovations in Spectrum Management Lynne Fancy Senior Director Spectrum Development and Operations Industry Canada September 2014.
Presentation on behalf of the TETRA + Critical Communications Association Current Status of TETRA and the Way Forward Ali Helenius Hungarian TETRA Forum.
National Science Foundation Symposium Ed Thomas Chief, Office of Engineering and Technology Federal Communications Commission.
The FirstNet Nationwide Network is intended to be a wireless, interoperable nationwide communications network. Broadband Breakfast Club Virtual Event -
© M2Z Networks Inc. All rights reserved. Advances in Wireless Technology and Impacts on Broadband Deployment National Broadband Policy Workshop August.
Established in 1974 Service Area of 1,200 Square Miles Population of 440,000 People We Answer 700,000 Calls for Service Each Year 3 rd Largest PSAP in.
Goals Metrics Benefits MilestonesTechnology Challenges A.1 Mobile power – “always on” Identify, implement and test the best ways to use existing technology.
Dubai, 2 nd – 3 rd November, 2014 Operational Aspects to ensure the Quality of Service provision in Telecommunication/ICT market Louisa Ama Sosu, Vice-Chair.
COnvergence of fixed and Mobile BrOadband access/aggregation networks Work programme topic: ICT Future Networks Type of project: Large scale integrating.
Scott Longhurst CalWA Vice Chairman, Education Committee.
Internet 2 Corporate Value Proposition Stuart Kippelman (J&J) Jeff Lemmer (Ford) December 12, 2005.
© 2009, Shared Spectrum Company National Broadband Plan Staff Workshop Technology: Wireless Broadband Panel 2: Rural Broadband Thursday, August 13, 2009.
Wireless Broadband Service in Rural America Rural TeleCon ‘06 October 24, 2006 Paul D’Ari Spectrum Competition and Policy Division Federal Communications.
Climate Sciences: Use Case and Vision Summary Philip Kershaw CEDA, RAL Space, STFC.
Richard Tworek VP, Enterprise Communication Servers 2006 Technology Focus Enhancing the Human Experience with Enterprise Real-Time and Secure Converged.
IT ISSUES & TRENDS, 2015 Faculty Technology Day Wednesday, August 19, 2025.
Munawwar M. Sohul Dr. Taeyoung Yang Dr. Jeffrey H. Reed a
Promoting Competition, Innovation, and Public Safety with Wireless Broadband May 2007.
Mission An alliance of individuals, NGOs, regions and corporations working to provide Europe with easy-to-use, resilient, and ubiquitous communications.
1 World Wide Consortium for the Grid Global Grid Forum Network-Centric Operations Community Session 28 June
An Overview of the Smart Grid David K. Owens Chair, AABE Legislative Issues and Public Policy Committee AABE Smart Grid Working Group Webinar September.
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003 Nationwide Perspective: Building a Nationwide Network for Public Safety Dusty Rhoads Office of Emergency Communications.
Communications Government Services, Incorporated Software Defined Radio for Public Safety Presentation to the National Conference on Emergency Communication.
"Challenges for Institutions in Adapting to the Global Information Infrastructure" Oleg Liber CETIS University of Bolton.
October 4-7, 2004 Los Angeles, CA VoWLAN Trends and Opportunities Kamal Anand Vice President Marketing Meru Networks
Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) Dennis Schwarz November 21, 2008.
____ __ ____ _____ ____ ______ _____ _____ ____ _____ _____ _____ ____ _____ Click to edit Master text styles Second level Third level Fourth level Fifth.
Critical Communications World, 21st-24th May © 3GPP 2012 © 3GPP 2013 LTE Standards for Public Safety – 3GPP view Balazs Bertenyi Chairman of 3GPP.
| Collaboration at Rural Business Approach.
Copyright© 2002 Avaya Inc. All rights reserved Anna Dorcey Director, Avaya DeveloperConnection Program August 4, 2004 Partnering in the VOIP World Anna.
EPA Geospatial Segment United States Environmental Protection Agency Office of Environmental Information Enterprise Architecture Program Segment Architecture.
Federal Cybersecurity Research Agenda June 2010 Dawn Meyerriecks
Catawba County Board of Commissioners Retreat June 11, 2007 It is a great time to be an innovator 2007 Technology Strategic Plan *
STATE AND LOCAL IMPLEMENTATION GRANT PROGRAM 1 December 6, 2012.
0 Federal Communications Commission Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau Department of Defense Spectrum Symposium DoD Support to Civil Operations:
Presented by Eileen McGrath (NEC) on behalf of the 3GPP2 Vision AdHoc 1.
Network Reliability and Interoperability Council VII NRIC Council Meeting Focus Group 1B Network Architectures for Emergency Communications in 2010 September.
1 IoT for Smart Cities Where we are at and where we could be Olga Cavalli CCAT LAT Argentina Forum on "Powering Smart Sustainable Cities With the Internet.
Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau 2006 Annual Report January 17, 2007.
Spectrum Management 2007 National Public Safety Telecommunications Council 700 MHz May 22, 2007.
1 CDMA2000 Broadband downloads Broadband uploads Smart Networks, Topology Enhancements Multi carrier BTS Interference cancellation HRPD HRPD Rev. B HRPD.
The member organizations of the National Public Safety Telecommunications Council are grateful to the Department of Homeland Security’s Science and Technology.
INTRODUCTION:- The approaching 4G (fourth generation) mobile communication systems are projected to solve still-remaining problems of 3G (third generation)
4 th SG13 Regional Workshop for Africa on “Future Networks for a better Africa: IMT-2020, Trust, Cloud Computing and Big Data” (Accra, Ghana, March.
Submission May 2016 H. H. LEESlide 1 IEEE Framework and Its Applicability to IMT-2020 Date: Authors:
Introducing: Chengdu’s Industrial Cloud Huawei & GDS Services Industrial Cloud Solution for SMEs Author/ID: Zhao Zhijuan/ Dept: Industry Solutions.
National Emergency Communications Plan Update National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners Winter Committee Meeting February 16, 2015 Ron Hewitt.
Spectrum Sharing in 3.5 GHz Band
1 700MHz Broadband Public Safety Demonstration Network Andrew Thiessen NPSTC June 15, 2010 Washington DC.
For more course tutorials visit NTC 406 Entire Course NTC 406 Week 1 Individual Assignment Network Requirements Analysis Paper NTC 406.
Public Safety Mobile Broadband A Victorian Perspective Steven Tsikaris 9 March 2016 Radcomms 2016.
FirstNet and Public Safety Wireless Broadband eNATOA WEBINAR August 4, 2014 Sean Stokes The Baller Herbst Law Group, P.C P Street, N.W. Washington,
Proprietary and Confidential – Use or distribution subject to restrictions on first page TerreStar Global Connectivity no matter where you are driving.
Advancing National Wireless Capability Date: March 22, 2016 Wireless Test Bed & Wireless National User Facility Paul Titus Department Manager, Communications.
Orientations towards the Scoping Paper H2020 Transport Programme Committee Brussels, 22 June 2016 SMART, GREEN and INTEGRATED TRANSPORT.
A New Era in Critical Communications
User Interference Effect on Routing of Cognitive Radio Ad-Hoc Networks
Municipal Planning: Including Smart City Apps
A reflection on Enabling Connected Mobility
How Is In-Building Wireless System Importance and How Big Is the Market Size?
Presentation transcript:

Emergency Communications Interface between Technology, Policy, and Business Paul Kolodzy 15 November 2012

Kolodzy Consulting Emergency Communications Locally Funded … Rural to large urban cores Regionally controlled Spectrum Use … 55 Regional Planning Committees National controlled Spectrum … National policy makers and politics International access to technology … cellular to public safety

Kolodzy Consulting Attributes It must be: Possible – does technology (current or quickly developed) provide a solution Permitted – does policy (national, local, or agency) allow the solution to be used Pragmatic – does it make economic sense with regards to the market or government Any complex system must address more than the technology and the business plan, it must address the policy constraints (and opportunities)

Kolodzy Consulting Policy – Technology Conundrum Disconnect between Technology Developers, System/Product Developers, and Policy Makers Concept, although enticing, is not supported by current policy Industry will not expend resources since the risk is high that policy will change User will not expend resource since there is no requirement for such a capability or Policy does not allow for such a capability Policy does not change since there is no clear path that indicates that this technology will be viable nor a driving need from the user community Disruptive Technology needs to be (can only be???) developed by an organization without direct ties to requirements

Kolodzy Consulting Emergency Communications Challenges  “Technology” Requirements (or desires) are very challenging Availability, security, coverage Interoperability Not thinking about a system-level solution Each band is independent Each architectures is expected to solve the entire problem Exploitation of Smart Radio Technology Assuredness through Diversity

Kolodzy Consulting Emergency Communications Challenges  “Policy” Lack of National Standard and National Organization creates fragmented requirements APCO, NPSTC, FirstNet, FCC … Follow the $$$ and the Policy National requirements can become unfunded mandates National requirements without sustained national investments Local responsibility without a local voice Responsibility lays at the feet of the local government official

Kolodzy Consulting Emergency Communications Challenges  “Economics” Requirements developers and funding sources are generally decoupled Insatiable appetites for capabilities Public Safety – Commercial Service work together A source of sustainable resources (spectrum, funding) for emergency communications Spiral solutions are discarded in favor of a model that is focused on “the big bang” Incremental versus large government “national” system deployment

Kolodzy Consulting Smart Radios Enabling New Directions Heterogeneous Networking Policy Integrated into Devices Spectrum Sharing Distributed Servers (Akamai) Peer-to-Peer

Kolodzy Consulting Policy  Technology Ubiquitous Coverage Requirement Penetration deep inside structures and in remote areas New Technologies in Hybrid architectures (HetNets) and for relays Self-Sustaining Funding Requirement Priority Access Spectrum vs Infrastructure vs Network Sharing Techniques Spectrum Band Allocations and Assignments Mixture of Narrowband and Broadband systems and waveforms High level of Interference Protection Converse to the Interference-limited commercial systems Smart Radio Combining Sensing, Adaptation, and Policy Carrier Aggregation Higher local throughputs Asymmetric Channel Pairing Enhanced Multicasting Data Caching (Content Based data management) Data applications and changing QoS Requirements Dynamic Spectrum Access Channel Assignments are only the starting point Interference Tolerant Systems Noise floor is no longer the limit

Kolodzy Consulting Possible Directions Innovative solutions that break the traditional architectures and funding models. Trade-off between: Users versus the policy makers Procurement officers versus the Funding agents Exploit baseline architectures with spiral development of new capabilities Stove pipe information paths versus cloud and crowd-sourcing Assuredness of information from external sources Heterogeneous networks tailored to emergency communications